The Wall Street Journal's "Facebook Files" has been widely lauded. But every article in the series also contains Facebook tracking scripts, and this clear conflict of interest (along with the WSJ's financial relationship with Facebook) is never mentioned.https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-facebook-files-11631713039 …
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It also wouldn't hurt for participants in this unsavory practice to grow a spine and force disclosure. On the Privacy Project, I talked to people all the way up to editor who said "I hate this, I sent email about it, but what can I do?" Pity the powerless NYT editors out there.
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Facebook makes an attractive and compelling villain, but the problem is systemic, and hiding this fact only makes large news sites' relationship with readers more adversarial. It's like telling grapes all about how evil Ernest and Julio Gallo are while you pick them.
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The people who built this extractive and exploitative system of delivering online journalism are the ones now who weep the loudest about the spread of misinformation, and why people don't trust them as much as they should.
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The status quo on privacy is that most prominent voices are former employees of big tech, the privacy think tanks all take tech money, Congress also takes the money and relies on social media for fundraising and campaigning, and journalism lives and dies by tracking and virality.
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